Hands-free: Monkey plays video game – with its brain
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Elon Musk’s startup devoted to meshing brains with computers was closer to its dream on Friday, having gotten a monkey to play video game Pong using only its mind.
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Musk has long contended that merging minds with machines is vital if people are going to avoid being outpaced by artificial intelligence.
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A video posted on YouTube by the entrepreneur’s Neuralink startup showed a macaque monkey named “Pager” playing Pong by essentially using thought to move paddles that bounce digital balls back and forth on screen.
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“To control his paddle, Pager simply thinks about moving his hand up or down,” said a voice narrating the video. “As you can see, Pager is amazingly good at MindPong.”
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Neuralink devices were implanted on two sides of Pager’s brain to sense neuron activity, then the monkey played the game a few minutes using a joystick to let software figure out the signals associated with hand movements.
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Pager’s reward was banana smoothly served through a straw when he successfully batted the digital ball from one paddle to the other, according to the demonstration.
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After a few minutes, the “decoder” program figured out what neuron signals to look for and the joystick was no longer needed for Pager to play the game.
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“A monkey is literally playing a video game telepathically using a brain chip!!” Musk tweeted triumphantly.
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The decoder could be calibrated to enable a person to guide a cursor on a computer screen, potentially letting them type emails, text messages, or browse the internet just by thinking, according to a blog post at neuralink.com.
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“Our first goal is to give people with paralysis their digital freedom back,” the Neuralink team said in the post.
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Members of the team last year shared a “wish list” that ranged from technology returning mobility to the paralyzed and sight to the blind, to enabling telepathy and the uploading of memories for later reference — or perhaps to be downloaded into replacement bodies.
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For now, Neuralink is being tested in animals with the team working on the potential for clinical trials.
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With the help of a surgical robot, a piece of the skull is replaced with a Neuralink disk, and its wispy wires are strategically inserted into the brain, a previous demonstration showed.
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The disk registers nerve activity, relaying the information via common Bluetooth wireless signal to a device such as a smartphone, according to Musk.
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“It actually fits quite nicely in your skull. It could be under your hair and you wouldn’t know.”
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Experts and academics remain cautious about his vision of symbiotically merging minds with super-powered computing.
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